8 Grade Social Studies Guidelines For Grading, Homework and Discipline That Enhance Learning
8 Grade Social Studies Guidelines For Grading, Homework and Discipline That Enhance Learning
Grading Guidelines:
2. Grades will be based on individual achievement of learning goals and will not
be affected by issues such as effort, attitude, and participation. These factors
will be reported separately. In addition, individual grades will be given for
group work.
4. New information showing additional learning about any given standard will
replace old information. Grades will reflect the most recent learning. Old
scores relating to that standard will be discarded.
8. Students will always know how their grades are formulated. They will often
take part in the assessment process because recent research indicates that
student-involved formative assessment is the most powerful innovation in
learning that currently exists.
Grading Scales:
If prevailing median scores for learning goals are in the range of 90 to 100
percent, a grade of A will be given. The cutoffs for B, C, and D, respectively will be
80%, 70%, and 60%. Less than 60% will be considered F. Although I will never give a
letter grade lower than the median score indicates, I may award a letter grade higher than
the numbers indicate if there is sufficient additional non-numerical evidence of greater
learning, such as performance rubrics or scoring guides which don’t easily convert to
percentages.
Homework Guidelines:
We will not have homework every day. Most of our formative assessment
activities will take place in the classroom with my coaching. I will expect students to
work on “big” assignments with extended deadlines at home on occasion. My homework
hotline message will inform you of what we have covered in class for the day and our
plans for the week. It may vary from our actual schedule because I must submit the
entire week’s plan on Monday and I must be flexible covering our course goals. I
welcome your calls regarding makeup opportunities. My phone numbers and email
addresses appear at the end of this document.
Makeup Work:
The Hillsboro District policy for makeup work is to give students the “number of
days absent plus one” as time to make up work. I regard this as a guideline, not an
inflexible rule. If a student is well enough to work at home, it is to their benefit to stay
current from home. (I will never require less time than the District guideline, in any
case.) If the student is too ill to stay current, even the stated amount of time may not be
sufficient and may generate great stress for the student. We will agree, parents and
students both, on mutually acceptable target dates for completion of work. If a student is
indisposed up to and beyond a grading period, we shall make arrangements with the
principal for a fair opportunity to make up work.
Late Work:
Behavioral Guidelines:
Please consult the student handbook for details on school rules. I promote the
concept of mutual respect and students are able to relate this to their conduct.
Additionally, I clarify my expectations by reference to the Golden Rule, which states that
we should treat others as we would like to be treated. Students understand these
references and apply them to their classroom behavior, my expectations and procedures.
In rare cases where disciplinary action is required, I follow the Discipline Plan outlined in
the student handbook.
Progress Reports:
The Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD) will publish these guidelines in March 2003, in
Guide for Instructional Leaders Action Tool: Guide 2, Ed. Ken O’Connor; ($89.95 for members; $109.95 for non-
members).